THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA. GULLIBLE ENGLISH EDITORS. BaMtlth With Which Their American Corwapontlnce Loud Them. Ta English will never understand n Americans so long as they permit tmilvea to swallow all the storlc that are told to them concerning Amer Umn customs wid habits. It Is said to b the easiest thing In the world for a arcwd American writer to unload Into tt columns of English papers, and at apace rate, articles which purport to ncrlbe life In this country. 80 long a the Americans are made to appear eccentric the English editors are will tec to pay for tlitse article. Some of tkis newspaper "rot" Is so absolutely without foundation that it Is no won der the Kngllfh have such odd Ideas onncernlng us. For Instance, the Lon don Dally News, which is supposed to ka a well Informed as any of the Lon don Journals, recently published a "New York letter," of which the fol lowing extract Is a fair example: "The young men of New York lend the way, aa far as the States are concerned, In luxurious nnd costly underwear and linen of the finest Kind, elaborated with ambrolderles. A dozen Bilk night shirts were comprised In a recent purchase. Kaeh. was of a different tint of helio trope, rose violet, pistachio, primrose,' torgrt-me-not blue, topaa and daffodil yellow, and the embroideries were flor al. Hoses in natural colors of flowers and leaf were depleted with the needle on one, pansles on another, violets on a. third, and so on throughout the en tire range. The price of these garments was six guineas apiece. The pocket handkerchief w ufnially bought by a youthful millionaire average a guinea each. The texture is so fine and soft that the v hole expanse can be crushed together into the size of a walnut. The foRlals or monogram are embroidered u the most exquisite stltchery, sur rounded by leaves and flowers. Such purchasers buy their sleeping suits In seta of fifteen, never using the same toe two consecutive nights. The cost f each suit averages from four guineas to nix, so that the well furnished ward tobe Is an Item that means money. Thla extravagance Is supposed to be In dicative of refinement by those whose purpose It suits to profess that they, think so." Troy Times. A rarlont Point. At a r-cont mooting In London of the mrffiah ornltlioloKiHta' Club Interest centred In a collection of 900 cuckoo eggs which was exhibited by one of the members, and ever since then the Eng lish papers have been discussing the habits and powers of that somewhat disreputable bird with much energy. It has long been known that the eggs of BrttlBh cuckoos are curiously varied aa to their marklnirs, no two of them be tas alike, nnd the difference Is often so Creat that It is hard to believe that both of two contrasted specimens were laid by birds belonging to the same species. It has also been noticed that very cuckoo egg resembled more or less closely the other eggs in the nest where It was found. This has been ,beld to Indicate that somehow or other Jjheocuckoo hns acquired the remark able power of determining beforehand of what color and marking an egg must be to eaoape detection by the birds selected by her as foster parents tor her children and of producing a counterfeit of the required kind. Now another and simpler explanation as been made by one of the many men who are studying the problem. IM ays that the cuckoo doe not lay her gg In the neats of other birds, but somewhere elne any old place will do and only after she and her mate have carefully inspeoted it and decided what other bird's eggs it most resembles do thy begin to consider the question of where to put H for Incubation. If the egg looks like a hedge sparrow's egg, they look about for a hedge Bparrow's nest and there they carry It; If the re semblance Is to the egg of a finch, then upon a finch, and not a hedge sparrow, ia Imposed the task of rearing the inter loper. At the meeting referred to this theory wa seriously considered, and its probability was generally admitted. fortunately, the American cuckooa are honest birds and have homes of their own. The Britishers, therefore, ean be left, without our aid. to struggle javith the mystery. New York Times. HONORING GE5EUAL8 MEADE AND HANCOCK. Equeslriai Statue of the Heroes Unveiled at Gettysburg. The equestrian statue erected by the state of Pennsylvania in honor of of the memory of General George Gordon Meade, commanding the Army of the Totomac, was unveiled in the presence of a large number of distinguished military officers and civilians. The ceremonies opened with music, followed by prayer. Master George Gordon Meade, a grandson of the dead hero, unveiled the statue. As the drapery fell from the statue, lignt battery C, Third United States artillery, fired a salute. Dedicatory exercises were then con ducted by George G. Meade- Post No. 1, department Pennsylvania G. A. R. The statue was then formally delivered to the governor of the com monwealth by Brevet Brigadier Gen eral J. P. S. Gobin, of the commission which had charge of the erection of the statue. Governor Daniel H. Hastings, of Pennsylvania, received the statue on behalf of the common wealth. Upon the conclusion of the governor's remarks, Brevet Major General David McMutrie Gregg, who commanded the second cavalry divis io 1 at Gettysburg, was introduced as the orator of the day. The exercises closed with music. The exercises were held at the site of the monument just in the rear of the Bloody Ancle. Chaplain Stevens, of Meade Post No. 1, G. A. R., made the invocation. When the flags fell from the statue a great shout went up from the crowd that ceased only with the roar of the cannon sa lute. At the conclusion of General Gregg's oration, Major General Miles, Brigadier General Brooke and sculp tor Bush Brown made snort addresses. Late the same day the equestrian statue in honor ot Major General Winheld Scott Hancock, commanding the second army corps, was unveiled with ceremonies similar to those of the morning. Brevet Brigadier Gen eral Henry H. Bingham, who was on General Hancock's staff at Gettysburg delivered the oration. A Shark Among the Menhaden. The other day," a fisherman said, I read about the blueflsh charging the menhaden and driving them ashore. Did you ever see the blueflsh charge a school of menhaden at sea? That Is, something worth seeing, too. The blue Ash throw their lines forward until they almost surround the menhaden, and they attack them flank and rear. The menhaden fairly make the water poll In their efforts to escape, while all around the enemy Is at them tearing relentlessly. '"Into all this commotion comes a great shark; it's a picnic for the shark, a school of menhaden ail neraeu up tor Its benefit. It swims leisurely into the midst of them, opens its mouth, and takes in half a dozen menhaden at a ulp. It swims around and bites out half a dozen more from the school; it Korgea itself without effort. "But tihe menhaden are not nearly as snuoh disturbed by the presence of the SDonster swimming about among them as they are by the charging blueflsh tXhe shark takes half a dozen fish or more at a bite, while the blueflsh only bites a piece out of a single Ash; but her is only one shark, while there may be thousands of blueflsh, plunging and tearing Incessantly, and killing and maiming at every stroke. "The shark's a brute, but under such circumstances the menhaden has lees of fear than it has of contempt for him." New York Sun. The lleurt In Cycllusr. "It ta rrnneriiiri to believe, that ldnvnlrt tiding should be avoided in every case of heart disease. Physicians who have made a study ot this question declare that It may even be very beneficial in Mi-tnln InMtfLncefl In which the nstlnn of the heart ds feeble, and in which signs of fatty dcgt-mtt'utlon are found 1nmA(u1 milRrMll.r exerclNP a lmAt 4n. arlably Improves the condition of the Heart ltseir. 1 nr- ure, nowever, sev eral indulgences that persons with weak hearts sriould beware of, such as straining to climb hills and meeting head wlndH, exnewlve fatltrue and par ticularly exciting the heart and calling arxm its resei-ve strmnth in the use ol alcoholic sUiiiulania and ImprojK-r food, rwtfwa Times. . , , . , t U,.A Hood Health And a good appetite go hand in hand With the loss of appetite, the system cannot long sustain itself. Thus the fortifications of good health are broken down and the system is liable to at tacks ot disease, it is in such cases that the medicinal powers of Hood's Sarsaparilla are clearly shown. Thou sands who have taken Hood's Sarsa parilla testify to its great merits as 1 purifier of the blood, its powers to restore and sharpen the appetite and promote a healthy action of the diges tive organs, lhus it is, not what we say but what Hood's Sarsaparilla does that tells the story and constitutes the strongest recommendation that can be urged for any medicine. Why not take Hood's Sarsaparilla now ? Censure for the "New" Woman. The following is an extract from a paper on Missions read before the Christian Endeavor society of the First M. E. church on Sunday evening: ".furthermore it is the mission of every Christian Endeavorcr to protect the home. That means the annihila- i'on of the "new" woman craze. The true woman advocates a liberal edu cation, believes that modesty and re finement are invaluable womanly qualities and seeks to shape her chil dren's lives by the influence of a mother's love and a model home." 'The "new" woman spends half her time attending clubs and lodges and the other half wearing bloomers and fighting lor female suffrage. She would not invite social criticism by carrying her own baby in her arms, but lugs a long eared Spaniel through the streets all day. The qualities that George Washington's mother thought womanly are undergoing reformation. Domestic inclinations are at a discount, and spare time only is devoted to maternal duties. Rather than instruct and mould her daughter into a noble woman; rather than rear her boy under a love and tender influ ence that might qualify him to some day save a nation, she wastes her time and energy in the discharge of social functions and the abuse of gov- crmental laws. The home is next to the nation and the woman who neglects her home is little less a traitor than the man who sells his nation. The womanly woman can't find time to run for Congress. Providence has given her a sacred mission which she dare not thwart." People have to look sharp these days if they don't want to be run into by reckless bicycle rideis. The Tact that Doctors frequently advise change of air and climate to those suffering from ca tarrh is proof that catarrh is a local and climatic disease, and not a con stitutional affection. Therefore, un less you can afford to leave home and business, you can find the remedy in Ely's Cream Balm. Applied directly to the seat of the disease, it effects instant relief and a satisfactory cure after short continuance. No mercury nor injurious drug is contained in the Balm. 50 cents. All druggists. "I wor der what would be done to the preacher of a modern fashionable church with a membership of rich men, if he should tell his hearers as plainly as Christ told the young ruler "Go and sell all that thou hast and distribute unto the poor, and thou shalt have treasure in heaven." We are told this command was not for all the rich, but just for this one rich man, because his heart was set on his great possessions. Find me a rich man who is not in the same boat and I will show you a cartel ambling through the eye of a needle. What preacher to-day dares deliver Christ's message to the world ? How many are there that it would not cost their pulpits to lo this? So they go on, making religion a matter for the world to come and enveloping themselves with safe platitudes about spirituality, while they fight the evils that are in the world with blows that fall light as feathers. " B. F. Sharpless, Pres. N. U. Funk, Sec, C. H. Campbell, Treas GBLOOMSBURCO LAND IMPROVEMENT COMPANY. Capital Stock, $30,000. Plotted property is in the comiDg business centre of the town. It includes also part of the factory district, and has no equal in desirability for residence purposes. (JiiUlUi lAJLo are offered at values that will be doubled in a short time. No such opportunity can be had elsewhere to make money. Lots secured on SMALL MONTHLY PAYMENTS- Maps of the town and of plotted property furnished on ap plication. Call upon or write to the Secretary, or J. S. Woods, Sales Agent, or any member of the Board of Directors. BOARD OF DIRECTORS. C. W. Neal, B. F. Sharpless; A. G. Briggs J. L Dr. H. W. McReynolds, Dillon. Dr. I. W. Willits, N. U. Funk. IF YOU ARE IN NEED OF CARPET, MATTING, or OIL CJLOTII, YOU WILL FIND AJ NICE LINE AT W. 1EL BEOWEM 'y 2nd Door above Court Houoo. A large lot of Window Curtains in stock. PARKER'S CINCER TONIO m tittei Luutf Trouble, Debility, iistret!ng utomich and ft-male tH, nnd 1 noted fur making nirea whan ill oUmt lira in nt fvn. ltvcry tnnrner ana mvun nowm nnu PARKER S HAIR BALSAM CTeuui tuid btiftutifl tht hair. h jjwavor 1U to iiortora Gtj ' Hair to ita fcouthful Color. "Cure tcip rtitt.' hair inuif. rcn'ir nfiGK fiS Th.nnlTor Cur.fnf I RESTORE LOST MANHOOD Young and middle-aged men who suffer from errors ol youth, losacl vitality. Inipotcucy .Benilnul weak ncs, gleet, strictures, weuknes ol body and mind, can ha thoroughly and permanently cured bvmy new method ot treatment. None other like It, Immediuta Improvement. ConlultUlon I11 book Irtt. Aid. DR. SA11TI1, Lock box 63S.PMIa. Pa. ll-':3.1y..r'. ji Co ANOTHER LINCOLN 8T0RY. Aboat a B7 and Olnrbrd, Hot It II Inatratcd the rolnt. Mr. Lincoln wm one of the rare talk era who could always point a moral with an adorning tale taken out of hla own experience. Everybody has expert, encea If he only knowa It. Most of us are so much In the habit of taking; In wisdom and fun through the printed page of the story as another man tens It that we lack the capaolty to see it for ourselves. The story teller Is the man who nndC his own material. An old Southern politician was moralizing: thus a few rights ago and eulogizing the man the South uaed to dislike: "When Lincoln first came to Wash ington I went to see him, so prejudiced against him beforehand that no man with less genius could have overcome It. I left that first Interview his friend. No man ever came under the charm ol Lincoln's personality without respect ing him, and, if allowed, loving him. "One day, after we had become fairly gooi friends, I told him of my early prejudice. . " -Mr. Lincoln, I said, 'I had heard every mean thing on earth about you except one. I never heard that you were too fond of the pleasures of life. Mr. Lincoln sat for a moment stroking Ms long cheek thoughtfully, and then he drawled out In his peculiar Western voice: "rho Minim me of something that a boy said to me when I was about tenn years old. Jf " 'Once in a while my mother used to" get some sorghum and some ginger and mix us up a batch of gingerbread. It wasn't often, and It was our biggest treat. " 'One day I smelled It and came Into the house to get my share while It was Jiot. I found she had baked me three gingerbread men, and I took them out under a hickory tree to eat them. " 'There was a family near us that was a little poorer than we were, and their boy came along as I sat down. " ' "Abe," he said, edging close, "gim me a man." " 'I gave him one. He crammed It into his mouth at two bites and looked at me while I bit the legs from my first one. " ' "Abe," he said, "gimme that other'n." 'T wont.il it. hut 1 rave it to him. and as it followed the first one I said: Tou seem to like gingerbread?" Abe," he said, earnestly, "I don't s'pose there's anybody on this earth likes gingerbread as well a I do," and, drawing a sigh that brought up crumbs, "I don't s'pose there's anybody gets less of It. And the old politician said Mr. Lin coln looked as though the subject was ended. Burlington (Iowa) Hawkeye. The Teacher Taught. Sir Edwin Arnold, In the volume of autobiography which he has Just pub lished, tells the unique story of how. as master of the Birmingham Gram mar School, he was caned by one of the boys. The class was engaged on Cicero. Some disorder occurred near the mas ter's chair, and, seizing the cane, he cave a nasty cut upon the too tempt ing back of one youth, who seemed to be the offender." "If you please, sir," said the boy, squirming. "I did noth ing. It was Scudamore that kicked me In the stomach, underneath the deek." The statement was true. Scudamore had demanded from his neighbor, quite Illegitimately, the explanation of an obscure passairp, and, not being attend- td to, had taken this much too emphatic) moans of enforcing attention. Having called the class up, Arnold said to the doubly wronged boy, who was still rubbing the place: ' It Is I who am most to blame for having dealt you an undeserved blow. Take that cane and give it back to me as bard as you got it." "No, sir," the lad answered, I can't do that." The whole great school room was now listening, masters and all. Arnold InslBted: "Jones, you must obey me; and If you disobey, I am sorry to say I shall make you write out that page of Cicero three times, staying In to do It." i Jenny I.lnd Sang for Him. Edward V. Eccles, the veteran musi cian, who died at his home on North Thirteenth street recently, was fond or telling this anecdote of his youth: "It was about the beginning of the war," lie lnveriably began. "I was then a clerk in a large mufclc publishing house on Chestnut street. One day a well dressed, quiet little woman entered the store and asked me to show her some muHio of a classical nature. We struck up quite a conversation, in the course of which I asked her 'If she had heard the great Jenny Llnd, who was then the talk of the town. She laughed and eald: 'Oh, yes; I have heard her. Have you?' I told her that I hadn't had that pleasure, and that I had very little prospects of hearing Iter, the price of admission waa so high. She laughed again, and then she handed me a song she had picked out, and asked me to play the accompaniment for her while she tried It She sang so beautifully that I played like one In a dream When she had finished she thanked me, and, with a rare envlle, Bhe said: You cannot say now that you have never heard Jenny Llnd!' She thanked me again, and left me dumfounded." Philadelphia Record. Mliplaoad Zal. "Zeal," remarked a member of thd Society of the Daughters of the Amerl can Revolution the other day, ''Is some. times misplaced. I've been urging a friend whose family I know to be an old revolutionary one to Decome a Daughter. She has never shown any enthusiasm about Joining and her con servatism had simply the effect to in crease my desire that she should. So when one day recently I found myself unexpectedly trte-a-tete with her for a trip to Philadelphia, I renewed my at tach with a bold move. As the train was leaving Jersey City I saild in my moBt engaging manner: 'Now, my dear Mrs. S., I have you at my mercy for full two hours. Before we rwuih Phlla delphia you must have promised me that you will come Into the Daughters I warn you itihat you may as well yield first an last, for yield you must. We want you very much.' Mrs. S. smiled rather peculiarly. 'Are you sure you will want me,' Bhe said, quietly, 'when I tell you that my most prominent revo lutionary ancestor was Benedict Ar nold?' "New York Tunea. 11 A Bicycle Built for Two." I Five cents' wcrth of "BATTLE AX" will serve two chewers just about as long as 5 cents' worth of other brands will serve one mn. This is because a 5 cent piece of "BATTLE AX" is almost as large as the JO cent piece of other high grade brands Mutual Reserve Fund Life Association. Edward B. Harper, Founder. Frederick A. Burnham, Fresidont. FIFTEEN YEARS COMPLETED ANNUAL MEETING AND REPORT. Ills Largest and Strongest Un Mm Lifs Insurance .on- pames in In World. 69,000,000 of Mew RuHlness tn 1893. ,oM,66o,ooo f Ht'NiiieHit in Fo. te. 84,o84,t73 ot Den It Claim paid In 1895. a5.000.000 ofDtatli Claims paid since Ilnsluesg bexnn. 189s SHOWS AN INCRKASE IN RROSI ASSETS, AM IKtlKKASK II IHtV 1" Ml1 Kl 1.1 B, AN INCHKASi; IN IISCOM1C, AN1NCKI AHK IN HI'HIMaiNFORCE, O V'lvK 103,800 HhMUKHS INTEKKSTF.U, The Annual Meeting of the Mutual Reserve Fund Life Association was held in the Association's Buildinsr. corner Broadway &Duane St., New York City, on Wednesday, Jan uary 22nd, and was attended by a large and representative gathering of policy holders who listened with keen interest to the masterly Annual Report of President Burnham. Many policy holders evidently regarded this as a favorable opportunity to meet face to face the new cuief executive officer of the Association, President Frederick A. Burnham, the man whose grasp of lite insurance, whose keen executive ability and strong individuality have enabled him to take up the work laid dewu in deal h by the founder of the institution, the late Ed ward 15. Harper, and make of the administration of his office of President, not an echo or copy of that of his predecessor, but a piece of finished work, characteristic of a man of independent views, and worthy to follow the work which had carried the Association to a position never attained in the same length 01 time by any life insurance organization in the world. It is rare, indeed, that a great institution like this passes, without check to its prosperity, through a change in the executive chief, tor it is rare indeed that a chief like the late Mr. Hamer finds so able a successor as President Burnham. The record of the year 1895 speaks for itself, and shows the following gratifying results. The GROSS ASSETS have increased during the year from $5,530,115.99 to $5,061,707,82. - The NET SURPLUS over liabilities shows a NET GAIN for the year of $300,329.43, and now amounts to $3,582,509.32. The INCOME from all sources shows a gain for the year of $031,541.97, and amounts to $5,575,281.50. DEATH CLAIMS to the amount of $4,084,074.92 were paid during the year, an increase over the previous year of $1,013,560.91. The BUSINESS IN FORCE shows again for the year of $15,293,205, and now amounts to 308,G59,371. Counting three hundred working days in the year the daily average income for 1895 is $18,584.27; the daily average payments for death claims, $13,052.25, and the daily av-age gain in business in force within a fraction of $51,000. CtTPersons desiring insurance, nn agency, or anv other information concerning the . 'T TUAL RKSliRVE FUND LIFE ASSOCIATION may apply to E. B. EtWBWIGf Sapt,, 53 Dow nine: Illock. ERIK. PA "Where Dirt Gathers Waste Rules." Great Saving Results from the Use of